[The Operation Jigsaw trilogy is a series of novels that introduce us to Conrad Clarke and several other characters whose stories are explored more fully in the much longer King’s Watch series of novels and short stories. This review covers the entire trilogy instead of the individual tales. I read them between April 28 and May 31 of 2021. That alone should tell you almost all you need to know about how strong - and how addictive - these stories are.]
Although I read these three novels after I’d started Hayden’s much longer and more in-depth King’s Watch series, which tells of many of the same characters and their back stories, they were no less enjoyable for that. In fact, the severe shift in world views made the stories different enough that they were almost as much fun as Watch tales.
At their center is one Conrad Clarke, a RAF helicopter pilot deployed in Afghanistan at the time the stories take place. We quickly learn that Clarke is, along with several of his military colleagues, involved in some less-than-legal activities that reverberate all the way back home in the UK.
These three novels give as much, or more, attention to Tom Norton, a talented detective with the Metropolitan Police in London. Though his background is in money laundering and fraud, he’s not at all afraid to get involved in more direct and dangerous investigations. Tom and his cousin Kate, also deployed in Afghanistan for a while, slowly connect the crimes they’re investigating in England with some of the actions Clarke and his team are conducting in Afghanistan.
While The King’s Watch stories all have very deep supernatural aspects, these three are entirely magic-free. Having read the Watch stories first it was a little jarring to read about Conrad’s and Tom’s lives and relationships without that element. Soon, mainly because the storytelling is so good and the characters and their actions so compelling, that was not a sticking point, or a barrier to the suspension of my disbelief.
Like most great tales, nobody in this one is ever simply black and white; most live in the very gray in-between areas that are always more interesting than the poles of Good and Bad. Even though Conrad never hesitates to bend the rules, military and otherwise, we know he’s not an inherently evil person. He remains conflicted and definitely has lines he will not cross. To be sure there are some Big Bads that are totally bad, and some Good characters that are almost always pure and good, but Conrad and his team are all flawed in some deep way. Often times these flaws are physical as well as mental or spiritual; I don’t think I’ve ever come across a story where so many of the principals are so scarred and battle-worn, from facial deformities, to slow-to-heal broken or replaced bones, to the shrapnel scars left by survivors of explosions, no one seems safe from some sort of physical tragedy or impairment. None of them are truly whole, or who they were before the trials they’ve lived or are living through.
Though these books can be read quickly, the ebb and flow of the action is set at a very manageable and natural pace. I’m not sure I could have read all of them so quickly otherwise.
I can’t recommend these books highly enough for anyone who likes their stories loaded with action and adventure, intrigue, heroism (and its counterpart), and even a little romance. You will not be disappointed.